Yeroskipos used to be the home of sacred gardens. Now it produces divine sweets.
Chrissie Flint © reports
'Just east of Paphos is the village of Yeroskipos, with its cluster of little basket and gift shops strung along the roadside. It is a place well worth exploring with the picturesque five-domed Byzantine church of Ayia Paraskevi and newly renovated Folk Art Museum.
The village's history stretches back to ancient times; its name, comes from the classical Greek 'Hieros Kipos' meaning 'Sacred garden' it is believed that it used to be an extensive area of beautiful gardens, filled with fragrant flowers and pomegranate trees, dedicated to the goddess Aphrodite. Pilgrims would rest in the gardens on their journey to the sacred temple at Kouklia from the old harbour at Paphos.
Today the gardens have long since gone. But the village is still filled with a sweet sugary fragrance that is carried on ihe air from a cluster of small buildings where the famous 'Cyprus Delights'—
a euphemism increasingly used since 1974 to describe what is called Turkish delight in English—are made (in Greek, their name, Loukoumia, has no geographical connotations).
Roadside stalls are piled high with brightly coloured boxes of these delicious sweets and the owners stand in the shop doorway and warmly invite you inside to watch the sweets being made. Cyprus Delights have been made in the village since 1895 and the little factories are all family concerns thet have been handed down through the generations.
Each family closely guards their secret recipes!
Inside one of the shops Savvas can be seen cutting large slabs of the cooled sweet mixture. He has been making sweets in the same workshop started by his grandfather for over forty years now, and he makes the sweets in the same way as he was taught when he was a boy.
He was happy to show me how to make the best loukoumia: Every morning, three enormous copper cauldrons are filled with water and the fires lit underneath them. Once the water has boiled the sugar is added and the solution is boiled for an hour, stirred continuously by an electric paddle. Next the starch is added, and the mixture brought back to the boil, for another five to six hours until it is smooth and shiny. The mixture is allowed to cool for a while, before the various flavours are added. There are twenty four to choose from including cherry, lemon, almond and chocolate, as well as the traditional rose flavour. The rose flavouring is made by the villagers at this time of year by boiling handfuls of fragrant rose petals and Collecting the condensed moisture. After the flavourings have been carefully added, the mixture is poured into large wooden trays to set.

